Mother Teresa's Canonization Portrait Unveiled in DC

Mother Teresa, who died in 1997 at the age of 87, was known worldwide for her work with the poor and suffering

Officials unveiled the canonization portrait of Mother Teresa in Washington, D.C., Thursday morning.

The portrait painted by renowned American artist Chas Fagan and commissioned by the Knights of Columbus will be displayed at Mother Teresa's canonization ceremony in Rome Sunday. It was revealed at the St. John Paul II National Shrine in Northeast.

Mother Teresa, who died in 1997 at the age of 87, was known worldwide for her work with the poor and suffering.

“She was such a humble woman despite her fame,” said Msgr. Charles Pope, pastor at the Holy Comforter-St. Cyprian Church on Capitol Hill. “You know, she never let that get to her. She just loved the Lord, loved his poor.”

A Brazilian man's "miraculous" cure from a brain infection paved the way for her canonization. 

Pope Francis in December decreed that Marcilio Haddad Andrino's cure was a miracle after Vatican doctors and theologians determined that it was medically inexplicable, instantaneous, lasting and due to the intercession of Mother Teresa. It was the final step needed to canonize the nun who cared for the poorest of the poor.

Vatican spokesman Greg Burke said all 100,000 tickets had been distributed for Sunday's Mass but that the crowd would likely be far greater, spilling into the main streets around St. Peter's Square. So far, 15 official delegations have confirmed their presence, 13 of them led by heads of state or government, and 600 journalists have been accredited.

Andrino's wife, Fermanda Nascimento Rocha, recalled at a Vatican press conference Friday that she and her family began fervently praying for Mother Teresa's intercession after receiving a relic of the nun on Sept. 5, 2008, after Andrino began suffering from the effects of a viral brain infection.

By December of that year, despite powerful antibiotics, the brain abscesses and fluid had built up so much that Andrino was suffering debilitating headaches. According to the official story, doctors decided the only chance was to operate, but on the day surgery was scheduled, they couldn't intubate him.

"When the doctor left the OR saying he couldn't do the operation — and that the medicine wasn't working anymore — I prayed a lot," Nascimento Rocha said. "I asked Mother to cure Marcilio if this is God's will, and if not, to take him by the hand and bring him to the house of the Father to feel his caress."

She said she went to her mother's home and prayed "with all the strength I had."

When the surgeon returned to Andrino's room, he was awake, pain-free and asymptomatic, according to the priest spearheading Mother Teresa's sainthood cause, the Rev. Brian Kolodiejchuk.

Within six months, Andrino said Friday, he had returned to work. Soon after, the couple conceived the first of their two children, though Andrino had been told that the powerful drugs he had taken had made him infertile.

He calls his two children "the extension of that miracle."

"We are very grateful to Mother Teresa for our family," he said.

Mother Teresa founded the Missionaries of Charity, and was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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